The Carp routines are useful in your own modules because they act like die() or
warn(), but with a message which is more likely to be useful to a user of your
module. In the case of cluck, confess, and longmess that context is a summary of
every call in the call-stack. For a shorter message you can use carp or croak
which report the error as being from where your module was called. There is no
guarantee that that is where the error was, but it is a good educated guess.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Carp/

Change the way Perl modules are installed, update the default Perl to 5.18.
Before, we had:
site_perl : lib/perl5/site_perl/5.18
site_perl/perl_arch : lib/perl5/site_perl/5.18/mach
perl_man3 : lib/perl5/5.18/man/man3
Now we have:
site_perl : lib/perl5/site_perl
site_arch : lib/perl5/site_perl/mach/5.18
perl_man3 : lib/perl5/site_perl/man/man3
Modules without any .so will be installed at the same place regardless of the

- Add p5-Carp 1.25
The Carp routines are useful in your own modules because they act like die() or
warn(), but with a message which is more likely to be useful to a user of your
module. In the case of cluck, confess, and longmess that context is a summary of
every call in the call-stack. For a shorter message you can use carp or croak
which report the error as being from where your module was called. There is no
guarantee that that is where the error was, but it is a good educated guess.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Carp/
Feature safe: yes